At a Glance

Description

Before beginning my first Teaching American History (TAH) grant in 2003, I was a struggling new teacher . . .

About the Author

Tracy Hutton taught at Lansing High School in Lansing, KS for 7 years. After participating in two TAH grants, she was selected to be a teacher leader for a third grant. She is currently the Curriculum Technologist for Salina, KS public schools, working closely with teachers to help improve student achievement with the effective integration of technology and continues to serve as a TAH teacher leader.

How Teaching American History Grants Changed My Classroom

Before beginning my first Teaching American History (TAH) grant in 2003, I was a struggling new teacher. Then in my third year of teaching at an affluent high school in Northeastern Kansas, I found myself struggling to get my students to become as enthusiastic about history as I was. I worked every day to get them to see a connection between what we were studying and their own lives. It was not until the lead professor of my TAH grant took us to do research at the nearby National Archives facility that I really caught a vision of how using primary sources could engage my history students.

The archivists at NARA Central Plains pulled the records of the Food Administration. I was thrilled to read through detailed accusations and evidence of hoarding during WWI rationing. I was fascinated by the efforts to hide flour and sugar coupled with the suspicious finger-pointing between neighbors. In one document, a man complained to the Food Administration that he knew his neighbor had hidden a large stash of flour and sugar in a closet. He further claimed that the owner concealed the contents by wallpapering over the opening. There were so many of these examples that it was difficult to choose which ones to use. After selecting several documents to include in my WWI unit, I decided to try something different.

And Now for Something Completely Different

After dividing students into groups, I gave each a laptop and a different document. With no background information, their assignment was to use the document to determine what it was referring to. Once they figured that out, they had to write a response from the addressee based on what they had learned from their quest. During that lesson, there were no students that were not fully engaged. I had no discipline problems, no yawns, and no daydreamers. The groups began to compete to see who would find the answer sooner. This gave me the confidence to try more things.

With no background information, their assignment was to use the document to determine what it was referring to.

When our TAH grant group was introduced to the holdings of the Library of Congress, the possibilities seemed endless. My students got glimpses of factory life in a Westinghouse factory in 1900. They laughed at early motion pictures like Buster Brown and The Great Train Robbery. I also included early radio broadcasting and advertising to spark discussions of life and pop culture during different times in American history. My students came to know exactly what primary sources were and by the end of my time with them they were finding their own resources.

My students came to know exactly what primary sources were and by the end of my time with them they were finding their own resources.

My TAH grants gave me the opportunity to travel to other regional archives where I found even more treasures. At NARA Pacific Alaska regional archives in Seattle, WA, I explored Chinese exclusion. The case files I searched revealed a lot about the issues of the time. I was able to digitize these case files and turn them into a web quest where my students analyzed accusations and made their own judgments of guilt or innocence. This turned out to be another great lesson that would not have happened without TAH. Those documents would have remained hidden in the miles of paper documents housed at that facility.

Challenging the Concept of Teaching

All the success I enjoyed using primary sources did not come without some difficulties. Because this method of teaching goes against the traditional lecture approach to teaching history, it took some time for my students, their parents, and the school administration to really understand that this was the "meat and potatoes" of the content and not the "dessert." By using primary sources, my class became student-centered. Rarely did I lecture. Instead, my students were engaged in inquiry and research. They were seeking to answer their own questions. Because they did not have lecture notes, many of my military dads—who were avid history buffs—questioned my approach. However, I did not back down and soon my school administrators realized that my students were performing better on state tests than their peers.

By using primary sources, my class became student-centered. Rarely did I lecture. Instead, my students were engaged in inquiry and research. They were seeking to answer their own questions.

It is important to keep expectations high in this type of classroom setting. The teacher must have a strong classroom management system in place and provide clear instructions. It is essential that the teacher roam the room and converse with all groups to gauge the level of understanding and involvement of students. This is where differentiation can really happen and problems can be solved.

It will take time to transform a classroom into this model. Begin by introducing primary sources where possible. Often, the textbook will give a short quote or image from a primary source. Use this information to find the entire document to show your students. Furthermore, there are many great books and websites available that are full of primary sources. For images, color copies are best. Save money by putting all of the primary sources for each unit into a classroom set of folders with sheet protectors. This way, fewer color copies are made and they can be reused year after year.

When I was chosen for the first grant, I thought that I would learn more about history content. Although I did learn so much from the visiting historians, nothing can compare to the radical change that occurred in my teaching. I was fortunate to participate in two TAH grants and to serve as a teacher leader in a third. It is so nice to see others catch the vision of how using primary sources can transform the traditional history classroom.

The content of this website does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of Education nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.